The Province

Friends mourn slain doctor

STRANGLED: Body of Ontario physician found in suitcase, neurosurge­on charged

- DAN TAEKEMA POSTMEDIA NEWS

WINDSOR, Ont. — After an Ontario Medical Associatio­n council meeting last weekend, Windsor doctor Darren Cargill bumped into a doctor he hadn’t seen since medical school. The two showed off pictures of their kids and talked about family life before going their separate ways.

Less than a week later, Cargill was scrolling through social media when he saw news that the woman he’d sat down with was dead, her body found in a suitcase near Vaughan, Ont.

“It was nice to catch up and talk about family. She was so full of positivity and optimism,” he said Sunday. “But just a few days later I’m reading that she had died. It was so strange and sad.”

The body of the well-respected physician, who grew up in Windsor-Essex, was discovered Friday after a region-wide search. According to police sources, she was strangled and hit with a blunt object before her body dumped near Kleinberg, a village about an hour outside of Toronto.

The doctor’s identity can’t be released due to a court-ordered publicatio­n ban.

“We received a call from the mother of the victim expressing concern that she hadn’t heard from her daughter in quite some time ... a body was discovered in a suitcase not far away,” said Toronto police Const. Allyson Douglas-Cook.

Mohammed Shamji, a 40-yearold Toronto neurosurge­on, has been arrested and charged with first-degree murder in connection with the case and appeared in court Sunday.

Douglas-Cook said an investigat­ion into the homicide is ongoing.

Cargill described the doctor as “a bright, fun-loving young woman.” After the council meeting he said she revealed she was getting a divorce, but was staying positive.

“She came across as very confident and upbeat,” he said. “Even when she talked about her divorce she was viewing it as a new beginning for her and her children.”

Cargill, a palliative care specialist at the Hospice of Windsor, is no stranger to death, but he called what happened to the doctor a “tremendous shock” and tragedy that’s left the Ontario medical community in mourning.

“She was such a bright light, it’s horrible,” he said. “You think about how wonderful of a person she was ... to know her life was ended so soon in such a sad way is terrible.”

Throughout the weekend friends and family of the woman took to social media to express their grief. Many changed their profile pictures to a simple sketch of a female doctor holding a baby next to a purple ribbon in her honour.

Alan Saad said he attended St. Peter Elementary School in Tecumseh, Ont. and St. Anne Catholic High School with the woman long before she became a doctor. He said back in Grade 7 their teacher would grant her a time slot every week where she could stand up and share a story she had written.

“She had a great sense of humour and was a great writer so she was allowed that special time,” Saad explained. “She had us rolling in the aisles. She was so entertaini­ng and funny.”

During high school the two drifted apart, but Saad said he recently reconnecte­d with her through Facebook where she would often post about long distance running, her husband and how much she loved her kids.

“She was an awesome mother,” he said. “It hurts to see something so terrible happen to such a good person.”

On Friday, Saad said he was scrolling through Facebook when he first learned how she died.

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Lawyer Liam O’Connor, left, and relatives of the accused leave Old City Hall on Friday, after the first court appearance for Mohammed Shamji, 40, a Toronto neurosurge­on.
— POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Lawyer Liam O’Connor, left, and relatives of the accused leave Old City Hall on Friday, after the first court appearance for Mohammed Shamji, 40, a Toronto neurosurge­on.
 ??  ?? MOHAMMED SHAMJI
MOHAMMED SHAMJI

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